Sunday 1 September 2013

Skylon - Royal Festival Hall London. Head Chef Adam Gray

Amazing venue - but work to do on the menu

The Skylon is located in the Royal Festival Hall on London's vibrant Southbank. It features two dining options and an amazing bar. The fine dining part is simply called Skylon "Restaurant". The more informal section is referred to as "Grill". I've tested both, but now that Adam Gray has taken over the kitchen is was overdue to re-visit, so we booked a table in the Grill. Skylon Restaurant, Bar and Grill share one gigantic room almost as wide as the entire Royal Festival Hall, with a window front facing the river.

The view this place has to offer is really spectacular - but hey, London has many dining venues with a cool view - the Southbank alone has plenty. Just in case you need some hints - check out the Oxo Tower or even cooler, the restaurant on top of the Tate Modern. But back to the Skylon. We felt welcome from the very first second. Our waitress took us to a window table - that's exactly what I asked for when I made the booking. Overall the service was very attentive, friendly and professional. But we didn't come for the service,... We came because I was curious about Adam Gray's food. The "...Chef that makes people happy through food" (not from me,... this is a quote from Adam Gray's website).

We had three starters:
- Fried duck egg with seared foie gras on toasted brioche with devilled sauce
- Grilled sardines on toast, caramelised onions and Bloody Mary dressing
- Smoked fish board with Lincolnshire smoked eel, Cornish smoked mackerel and locally smoked salmon, served with horseradish beetroot dip and pumpernickel bread. 


All three starters were delicious, but none of them was really exciting. The overall winner - and it should turn out, not just of the starter section, was the duck egg. You cant really go wrong with this combination. The egg yolk was nice and runny, a decent slice of seared foie gras on toasted brioche. Lovely. However, there was hardly any devilled sauce - they could have been a little more generous with that.

The grilled sardines on toast had the nice rustic flavours you'd expect, but the Bloody Mary dressing could have been more generous again. It turned out to be more of a cool sounding item on the menu than something that really adds to the dish. The smoked fish board was very straight forward - not much culinary finesse but it was pretty much exactly what you'd expect. One exception though - the bread was not pumpernickel (see picture).

Moving on the the main courses: We tried the tuna steak with mashed potatoes, buttered tarragon carrots and the risotto.



The tuna steak was presented nicely, with half a lemon and garlic and herb butter. Cutting a tuna steak to thin is a very dangerous thing to do. The thinner the cut, the higher the risk of ending up with a piece of dry fish, burned at the outside and dry in the centre.

This particular example here came with an almost bitter taste from the grill marks, in fact the undefined grill flavour overpowered everything. There's not much more to say about the tuna steak, except that in addition to the the cut being too thin, it also wasn't of the quality you'd expect in a place like the Skylon.
The mash and carrots ordered as a side were decent, but couldn't compensate for the disappointment of the tuna. The mash was creamy and the carrots nicely buttered - no negative surprise there, except for the unmotivated presentation. If a portion of mashed potatoes comes at a price of £4.50, one might expect the rim of the little pot wiped clean before it's being served - but let's not get picky.
I usually don't complain about the cost of a particular dish, however £27.50 for the tuna steak and the two sides doesn't feel right though, given the quality.

Nothing major was wrong with the risotto. The presentation was very clean and without unnecessary garnishes. The perfect texture of a risotto is to some extent a matter of individual preference. Some like it more soupy, some less. The risotto served in the Skylon grill is less dense and has more residual liquid - but this is not a negative. The rice was almost perfectly cooked, maybe a little bit under. Overall, it had a nice creamy texture. Nothing serious to complain about there.

For desert we shared an apricot tart and Earl Grey sorbet. Both was ok, yet not exciting.  
In a nutshell, the menu needs more work. Maybe the meat options are more refined than the tuna steak - maybe we simply picked the wrong (Friday) evening. This time the food didn't make us happy - but the Skylon is definitely a place I will re-visit.



SKYLON
ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL
LONDON SE1 8XX
020 7654 7800

skylonreservations@danddlondon.com
http://www.skylon-restaurant.co.uk

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